October Gallery is
Celebrating 23 Years in the African
American Art
Industry and has operated a physical art gallery in
Philadelphia, PA since 1985.
We have been connecting people with art for 23 years. We deliver magic
and romance to the art experience.
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October
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October Gallery believes
that art is for everyone. We like to compare ourselves to the
Marriott
Hotel chain. The Marriott is neither the Ritz Carlton nor Motel 6. It
is
a mid-range hotel. The company’s Web site states that the hotel offers
packages of “fun filled days and wild nights that will fit any family’s
budget without breaking the bank.” At the Marriott one can get an
expensive
or an inexpensive room depending on availability. October Gallery’s
marketing
philosophy is similar to that of the Marriott. We offer an art
experience
that will fit anyone’s budget, that does not have to break the bank.
October
Gallery’s average sale is between $400 and $800. The Gallery’s prices
range
from $25 to $25,000.
October Gallery opened for
business in July of 1985, at 3805 Lancaster Avenue, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
It operated from this location for nine years. During the 1990s October
Gallery
operated six locations: two in Philadelphia; one in Cherry Hill, New
Jersey;
one in Echelon, New Jersey; one in Burlington, New Jersey; and one in
Washington,
DC.
October Gallery also presents
the Philadelphia International Art Expo in November of every year. This
event, now in its 23rd year, is the nation's largest African American
Art
expo.
People often ask, “Where
did the name ‘October Gallery’ come from?” We tell them there is
a relation-ship between the tenth month of the year and October
Gallery.
Think about it! The month of October and October Gallery both exhibit
the
magnificence of beauty and color, one through nature’s
multicolored
autumnal arrays, the other through artists’ eyes. October comes in the
fall, when the colors of nature change. Leaves on the trees change from
variations of green to combinations of orange, red, purple, yellow and
brown. These variegated arrays are similar to the many colors on an
artist’s
palate; hence, the name October Gallery.
October Gallery has always
supported the communities it serves. Over a span of twenty three years,
we have donated hundreds of thousands of dollars in art, services and
other
gifts. This is no small feat considering we are a small gallery. There
are community groups and organizations that, like clockwork each year,
request from us a donation of art, which they then use for a raffle or
a door prize so as to promote a cause. Other beneficiaries
include
politicians, civic leaders, heads of corporations, and other
individuals
to whom we give original art (valued in the thousands of dollars) in an
effort to promote the art and the artists. October Gallery has
also
donated cash to a number of groups. We believe our type of gifts enable
the public to make a “conscience connection” to Black art. We
understand
that if we want people to consider making art a part of their daily
lives,
we have to get the art “in their faces.”
Our national and international
patrons and artists have witnessed firsthand the creation and
development
of the African-American art industry, which prior to the 1970s was
almost
nonexistent. This group of patrons and artists are part of what we call
the BlackStream Renaissance.
The term “blackstream” was
used by Black artists in the 1900s who were denied admission to the art
mainstream. More recently, fine art appraiser Edward S. Spriggs of
Atlanta,
Georgia brought the term “blackstream” to our attention.
Feeling
there was a need to identify this important time of formative awareness
of, belief in and commitment to African-American art, we coined the
phrase
BlackStream Renaissance.
We further define this growth
period as being marked by a collective community conscientiousness that
recognizes the creative, cultural and financial viability of
African-American
visual expression.
The interplay between artists,
community members and available resources has created a fabric-like
cohesion
characterized by:
•
Artists willing
to create
• A
community that
can inspire its artists
• A
community that
accepts its own cultural
creations as having
value
•
Sufficient community
resources to sustain the
exchange of value
The patrons and artists of
the BlackStream Renaissance purchased and sold art, displayed it at
home
and at work and shared it with friends, family, co-workers and the
general
public. In short, they have made African-American art an indispensable
part of their everyday lives. The African-American community is
effectively
supporting and building an art industry, perpetuated primarily by its
own
members.
Artists, galleries, museums
and others in the art business realize that because of proper
education,
focused marketing and love of culture, African-Americans have shifted
their
habits and allocated to the visual arts a portion of the more than 750
billion dollars they spend each year. This group has invested
precious
time and valuable resources in African-American art and has thereby
continued
to give it value.
To be clear, the BlackStream
Renaissance welcomes the mainstream but does not have to rely on it
for
content, aesthetic validation or financial continuance.
Educator and curator David
C. Driskell said, “The boom in Black art has come about not in the
market
of galleries of the auctions at Sotheby’s and Christie’s, but from
ordinary
Black people.”
Most African-American artists
market and exhibit in the African-American community. Successful Black
art festivals and expos, where artists sell and exhibit, recognize the
importance of marketing to this special community. It is in this
community where the strength and the value of African-American art
begins.
It is this community that has provided the foundation for the
Blackstream
Renaissance.